ElectroSmog Festival at Eyebeam

Eyebeam will be participating in ElectroSmog, a new festival that revolves around the concept of Sustainable Immobility. The festival, which takes place simultaneously at many locations around the world, will introduce and explore the concept of sustainable immobility in both theory and practice, with discussions, workshops, and performances taking place at each of the festival partners' home bases.     Eyebeam will run two events on Saturday, March 20: Eyebeam will also video stream live events from the other participating festival locations on Thursday, March 18 - Saturday, March 20 in Eyebeam's main exhibition space.   SCHEDULE OF LIVE STREAM EVENTS AT EYEBEAM Thursday, March 18, 4PM - 6PM EST / 21.00 CET (GMT +1) City and Country Branding Debate Participating live from Eyebeam: Beka Economopoulos and Jason Jones (Not An Alternative). Friday, March 19, 2PM - 4PM EST / 20.00 - 22.00 CET (GMT+1) Public Media Art Projects and Sustainability Saturday, March 20, 11AM - 1PM EST / 16.00 - 18.00 CET (GMT+1) Food and Global Mobility Tracing the path of food to our kitchen-table. Saturday, March 20, 3PM EST / 21.00 CET (GMT+1) Urban Wilderness Action Center Linkup Hosted by Jon Cohrs, Kai-Oi Jay Yung, Damoclash, and Eyebeam. Online linkup between New York, London, Berlin, Amsterdam and elsewhere. For a full schedule of events, please see: http://www.electrosmogfestival.net    
More about ElectroSmog   With Sustainable Immobility we refer to a critique of current systems of hyper mobility of people and products in travel and transport, and their ecological unsustainability. The exploration of Sustainable Immobility is a quest for a more sustainable life style, which is less determined by speed and constant mobility. A lifestyle that celebrates stronger links to local cultures, while at the same time deepening our connections to others across any geographical divide, using new communication technologies instead of physical travel . What we propose may sound a bit like a paradox: The proposition of the festival is that the unfolding crisis of mobility can only be effectively addressed by deepening our connections across geographical divides through new communication technologies. The festival wants to engage the fundamental promise of the information age that communication technologies can replace the need for physical mobility, and thus both contribute to ecological stability as well as a more rewarding both deep-local and translocal life-style. While this promise has existed since the dawn of the information age, it was never realized. New material realties, however, force us to critically re-examine these promises and seriously start to turn them into viable choices. Nothing is self-evident for us. We will also critically question the underlying premise that reliance on electronic connections and local roots is self-evidently more energy efficient and more ecologically sustainable than  current systems of globalised mobility of people and goods. Is "going local" the only solution? What are the true energy costs and environmental and health hazards of using even more electronic technologies (increased levels of electrosmog)? How can remote connections become a truly rewarding experience in and of themselves? We believe that only by answering such questions a viable alternative to the current unsustainable systems of hyper-mobility can be found. Bringing together a broad coalition The ElectroSmog festival brings together a broad coalition of designers, environmentalists, urban and spatial planners, technologists, artists, theorists, and engaged and concerned citizens, to explore and "design" sustainable immobility. The festival stakes its claim for a radical break with the current systems of hyper-mobility not simply by discussing the issue, but by actually implementing it. To achieve this the very concept of an international festival and its traditional conventions need to be rethought and redesigned from the ground up. Connecting the local off-line local with the international on-line ElectroSmog is a truly international festival, with everything you might expect of such a festival:  international debates and discussions, performances, art projects, exhibits, site specific projects, screenings, design competitions, and much more. However, no presenter will travel beyond their local or regional boundaries to participate in this event. To achieve this we will work together in a network of accomplished cultural and new media centres, labs, theatres and other public venues to create the local ‘hubs’ that will inter-connect for this unique festival. A crucial dimension of the festival will be its on-line presence, where audiences from basically anywhere with an internet connection can follow events on-line, join in discussions and debates, and contribute to the program. Beyond the broadband enclaves ElectroSmog acknowledges from the start that bandwidth is not equally distributed across and within societies. Therefore remote connection to lower bandwidth spaces, do-it-yourself telematics, and information technologies for the majority world will be one the central concerns the festival wishes to address, again both in theory and in practice. Thematic discussions, presentations and connected debates The ElectroSmog festival program is organised around a series of  interlocking thematic programs, connected discussions and debates all transmitted live over the internet. Themes covered by these events include:
  • Global views on the crisis of mobility
  • Witnessed Presence
  • Hyper-mobility and the urban condition
  • City and regional branding debate
  • E-mobility versus immobility
  • Designing for (im-)mobility
  • Public media art projects and sustainability
  • Energy and information
  • ElectroSmog is Good for You!
  • Food and global mobility
  • Deep local and remote technologies
Around the main program a host of satellite events is organised locally and translocally. These include:
  • Art projects and local interventions, including original works by Bureau des Etudes, Karen Lancel and Hermen Maat, Jon Cohns, Sean Kerr, Kevin McCourt and Bartolo Luque, and others.
  • Special events, screenings, book launches, and more.
  • A program of connected and localised workshops.
  • On-line projects and environments designed specifically for the festival.
Last updated: 12.07.2022
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